For the record

In "The famous faces that fooled Stanford clients" (News, 22 February) we wrote: "Randy Shain, vice-president of First Advantage Investigative Services in the US, said one of his clients had decided not to invest in [Sir Allen] Stanford's empire after he found allegations of money laundering dating back to a 1996 lawsuit, settled out of court." In fact, a court found in Standford's favour and the magazine that made the allegations apologised and paid Stanford's legal costs.

José Ferrer was born in 1912, not 1933, and Rita Hayworth's father was Spanish, not Mexican (Focus, last week).

"How Bridgend was damned by distortion" (Review, last week) included remarks made by Kerry-Lynne Doyle, a reporter on the Glamorgan Gazette. We should clarify that those remarks were made in May last year, since when Ms Doyle has moved to the Wales News Service.